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what happened to my friends monitor
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Forum Regular
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Langhorne, PA
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any ideas here
"Was just using the computer when these green lines started appearing on the screen. I rebooted, did an update check, and am now scanning for viruses. I also dont seem to have a laptop that will connect with my display. The green lines "move" so I assume the display is physically ok. Do LCDs wear out?"
thanks
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C2D Blackbook Week 44
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Sep 2005
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That doesn't look like a monitor problem, but rather video corruption -- ie. bad video memory or an overheating video card.
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Forum Regular
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Florida
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could be other electronics running from the same power source or nearby. Try changing outlets and moving other devices away from the computer. It sounds a little funny I know, but I had a very similar problem. Turns out my a.c. was doing it lol. Also, it might not clear up right away, you may have to reset everything and play around a bit.
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: Walnut Creek, California
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I have a similar problem- I figured it wasn't worth starting a new thread over.
I was starting up my rarely used G4 tower using an old CRT (which worked fine as a second monitor on my G5 tower). On start up, the monitor worked fine, up until the grey apple disappeared and the desktop showed up. At that point, the screen started to scroll down rapidly (as can be seen in the following shots). Is there any way to fix this, or is the monitor shot?
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: The deep backwoods of the PNW
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Miniryu, that looks like what can happen when a CRT is connected to a source that is trying to make it use a resolution or refresh rate that it doesn't support. Since you can at least see the display enough to swtich, try getting to the display preferences and knock the resolution down to something really low - like 800x600 at 60Hz or so. See if that fixes at least the erratic behaviour...then you can work your way up the resolution list until you find the best settings that are compatible with your monitor.
Or, look up the monitor specs online and set it to whatever that says.
To the OP - I've also seen that issue with a bad or misconnected video cable - try reseating the video card and the video cable to see if that fixes the problem, or try a different video cable.
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Sell or send me your vintage Mac things if you don't want them.
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: Walnut Creek, California
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Originally Posted by shifuimam
Miniryu, that looks like what can happen when a CRT is connected to a source that is trying to make it use a resolution or refresh rate that it doesn't support.
That's what I thought, but I've switched the resolution to 800x600 already with no luck. Plus, the monitor was capable of showing the start up screen when I booted up- it wasn't until the desktop came on that things got screwy. But anyway...
Oh, and thanks for replying so quickly!
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